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I am getting married on the last Saturday in May and my fiance and I are planning on going to Europe for about 6-8 weeks. We would like to leave immediately after our wedding for our honeymoon. We start our PhD program in the fall, so this will most likely be the last time we really get to travel (outside of short trips) so we want to make the most of it. We have both previously traveled, are VERY comfortable getting around on bike, train, bus, etc. and have no interest in staying in fancy places or resorts.

We have family that we can stay with in the following locations
1) Turin, Italy
2) Hamburg
3) Wetzlar - near Gissen German
4) London
5) Essex
6) New Castle

Housing would be FREE in all the places mentioned above. In some of those locations we would also have a car to use. So ideally, we could use some of those locations as hubs.

We are very open to the places we want to see, we do know that we want to travel a lil bit throughout Italy, and a little in France. My fiance wants to spend at least a week or so visiting his family throughout Scotland/England and I want to visit some of my family in Germany.

Where do you think guys thing that we should start and end - taking the weather into consideration? should we start in the south and travel north or vice versa? What cities should we definitely see?? Should we bother w/ Eurorail or travel more local? I found a one way flight from LAX to Lisbon for only $400! Help us plan out our awesome honeymoon!! I would really not prefer to stay in hotels unless they are relatively cheap - I have used Air BNB before and always had a great experience. We would LIKE to our bikes with us, although I am not sure how realistic that is. We both have Bike Friday fold up bikes (http://mybikeshopsg.files.wordpress.com/2010/06/bike-friday-tikit-combo-12.jpg) and once folded up our bikes can effectively fit into a carry on bag... so it would be great if we take them with us, but I am just not sure if we will.

Any help, feedback, guidance on what to purchase ahead of time, what savings are worth it and what isn't would be greatly appreciated. Any maps, etc. would also be great.. Should we bother w/ Eurorail or travel more local?

It's hard to be specific since you seem to be able to get free lodging some nights - otherwise I would say your budget is minute (only 85 euros per day for everything, including trains between cities).

I would have a loot at some student resources, since your budget is really quite modest - and you can probably get a lot of specific tips/hints there that may not be apparent to people traveling on larger budgets.

Most families get insulted if you do not spend some significant time with them, especially when one of them is new to the family.

We have traveled extensively in Europe and we have stayed with family and friends in Europe and they are both satisfying in there own way. We have become closer to our friends and family and are in regular communication with most of them while we still think of places and times we went on our own. Start in the warmest areas and travel north.

And I assure you no matter how burdensome for doctoral debt will be, you will return.

oh I forgot to mention that as wedding presents, we have had friend offer to buy us whatever Euro Rail passes, others are buying us our we choose up to $2,000. So the budget above does NOT need to include the cost of airfare or EuroRail transportation.

LAX to LIS for $400 I'd grab it. Can you find a similar fare back home? From anywhere and work from there. Trains are reasonable, buses more reasonable and comfortable. Congrats and good luck on your PHDs.

A nice itinerary seems to me: go to Rome, maybe Florence, Turin. Then via Vienna to Prague and Berlin (and maybe other Eastern European places. They tend to be less expensive than many Western European cities). From Berlin to Hamburg, then Wetzlar, then maybe via the Rhine valley and Amsterdam to Paris (alternatively go via Strasbourg and the Alsace). From there to your destinations in England.

From Turin you could also take a more direct route via Munich to Wetzlar and then Hamburg, Amsterdam and Paris.

Wait just a minute! For one thing, the last thing you probably need is a Eurrail Pass. STOP! Learn about point-to-point tickets and the deals you can get buy buying in advance on the national railroads.

And do not ever go to Europe with just a one-way ticket! Sure way to get turned back at the border by immigration and sent right back home. You need round-trip tickets, or at least two one-ways (or an open-jaw).

StCirq - I was actually thinking the same thing about point-to-point tickets, the only thing is I've only traveled w/ family before and usually they did all the legwork, so I am not sure how to go about doing the point-to-point tickets... should I get the reservations ahead of time? PLEASE give me advice on this part, because a 2 mon global Eurrail Pass will end up costing us nearly $4,000!

In regards to the airline, yes it's an open-jaw ticket. LAX portion = $427 after taxes
London to LAX = $599
tickets are behind held for 48 hours, have not made a purchase.

Awwww you're soooo sweet!! should I send you a private message or email you?? I'm using google maps to plan things out. Seriously considering the car rental thing but I don't want us to get exhausted from driving a lot, would prefer trains and buses. We both actually heard back from work today and we are instead of 6-8 weeks we are actually going to take 10 weeks! and we decided to use our Christmas bonus too - so we have a total of $9K plus 2,000 Euros to play with.

We can either fly into Lisbon or Rome.
Pros of Lisbon: We could travel to Porto and make our way to Madrid & Barcelona on our way to Rome.
Cons: Adding Portugal & Spain might force us to cut the trip short to other places that we REALLY want to see.

Soooo, I am leaning towards flying into Rome instead. So based on that here's the list that we came up with

Rome - at least one week
Sorrento
Florence (I've been so 2-3 days is enough)
Cinque Terre (minimum of 2 days)
Venice
Turin --- FREE housing, I think we'll stay here for a week or so and possibly go to some places nearby on day trips
Zurich
Munich
Salzburg
Prague
Berlin
Copenhagen -- I know it's out of the way but he "MUST" go
Stockholm - I know it's out of the way but he "MUST" go
Frankfurt/Wetzlar - FREE housing - probably stay 4-6 days
Paris
Brussels - maybe
Amsterdam - maybe
London - FREE housing, empty flat that his parent own
Essex - FREE housing
Edinburgh - FREE housing
He wants to spend around 8-11 days just in the UK

Can I make a suggestion? As you are leaving for Europe straight after the wedding choose for your first destination somewhere the two of you can be on your own for a few nights (3 preferably) and unwind. You'll both be tired from the wedding and probably sleep deprived. If it was me I'd like to do that before the onslaught of relatives started.

I like the idea of a week in Rome at the beginning of the trip. You can easily do a day trip to Florence if you've already been there. 90 mins on a fast train.

Of course you can make a suggestion Cathies! make more! seriously I need them!! We are getting married on a Saturday and are most likely leaving on a Tuesday. Our wedding is going to be super small (20-25 people) at a little winery in Malibu, followed by a very rustic farm to table intimate dinner. Afterwards we're going to hang out at our little apartment in Huntington Beach for 2-3 days before we leave for the Honeymoon. We have been living together for nearly 4 years, so we're pretty used to each other and while the honeymoon/vacation is going to be romantic, we're also pretty low key and more into traveling without any frills. Still, I knew that we had to spend at least a week in Rome, just to relax. I agree w/ you on the day trips to Florence and Sorrento. I am most looking forward to Cinque Terre - I think we should stretch that out to 4 days.

I find changes/closures in European restaurants and hotels less frequent than in the US. So if it's a recent guidebook -- and you trust it -- then the restaurant and hotel recommendations should be reliable. Confirm hotel ratings at booking.com and tripadvisor.com.

Never trust opening days and times in guidebooks. Doublecheck on the sight's Internet website and make sure that's the most up-to-date website.

As for your train travel, I'm happy to help where I can (I don't know boo about Portugal, though), but dates would be helpful, as well as your ages (maybe you said that already and I missed it). There's no way to PM on Fodors, but if you want to email me, that's fine: StCirq at aol dot com.

And yes, check out the train info that the Man in Seat 61 offers - brilliant!

Okay, here's what I came up with, feel free to give me advice and/or feedback on this

May 27 - June 4 Rome (Day trip to Pompei & another day trip nearby ** give me recommendations)
June 4 - June 7 Florence (day trip to Pisa & somewhere ** give me recommendations)
June 7 - June 10 Cinque Terre (would we have to go back to Florence in order to get to Venice or can we just go from La Spezia?)
June 11 - June 14 Venice (possible day drip nearby ** give me recommendations, Murano? Burano? Padua?)
June 15 - June 18 Turin (day trip Milan)
June 19 - 21 Luzern
June 22 - June 24 Munich
June 25 - June 27 Salzburg
June 28 - July 2 Prague
July 3 - July 6 Berlin
July 7 - July 9 Copenhagen
July 10 - July 13 Stockholm
July 14 - July 18 Frankfurt/Wetzlar
July 19 - July 24 Paris (possible day drip nearby ** give me recommendations)
July 25 - July 26 Brussels
July 27 - July 28 Amsterdam
August 29 - August 4 London
August 5 - August 7 Essex
August 8 - August 15 Edinburgh (possible day drip nearby or places to stop on our way from Essex to Edinburgh ** give me recommendations)

One suggestion-sounds like your husband is into Scandinavian stuff, so he should like to stop in York, England to visit the Viking Center. There's also lots of other stuff to see there: magnificent cathedral with Roman ruins underneath, medieval area, great museums.

From Edinburgh, Stirling Castle is the obvious easy day trip.

From Venice, Padua makes a great day trip if you care about art at all--Scrovigni Chapel is a short walk from the RR station. We prefer Torcello to the other two islands in the lagoon: really old church, good restaurants and, most important: absence of crowds.

Florence: Siena is a good day trip--better than Pisa, in my opinion, although the area around the Tower is interesting.

Paris: Chartres is good; Versailles of course.

Notice you've skipped Vienna, which, in my opinion, is worth stop, if only on the way to Prague.

Unless you really like to hike, I'd skip the Cinque Terre. Don't know that you could bike on the trail. CT has underwhelmed me in the past.

An alternative would be to go to Sorrento to stay and then backtrack via train to see Pompeii. To me the Bay of Naples is much more beautiful (and about a thousand times more historically and artistically important) than the CT. You can do a day trip to Pompeii (did it myself first time in Europe) but it makes a very long and exhausting day and it's best seen in combination with the National Archaeological Museum in Naples which has lots of the objects from there. Or stay right in Naples itself and see Pompeii by train.

Luzern is great, but I would pick Grindelwald over Luzern. If you like hiking in the nearest thing to heaven here on earth, I would stay in Grindelwald and explore the Bernese Oberland under the Eiger!

When we went to Cinque Terre, we made it a day trip from Santa Margherita Ligure.

Walking distance from SML is Portofino which is a pretty little town.

It took us 5 hours to visit all 5 cities of Cinque Terre. I didn't see much there to warrant staying there (maybe I am wrong). SML is a beautiful place.

The salt mine south of Salzburg is fun! (I've been there twice now. The Ice Cave in Wergen is pretty cool too!)

The trip looks easier if you eliminate Turin or Venice (from CT you could go right to Turin then up to Switz, etc.) If no Turin, then you could do a Venice to Vienna to Prague to Salz to Munich. (but I'm sure Turin family would love to see you)

I look at this list and wish I were doing it!! haha

Back in my youth, I used to save on hotels with overnight trains.

I did not like Frankfurt at all.

Stockholm back to Frankfurt? (There must be a reason) Seems disconnected.

Planning is half the fun of going there, so keep having fun! Lots of brilliant minds on this forum!!

You have a lot of 3 or 4 day stops which means that you spend part of one of the days traveling and then have 1 or 2 full days to see the sights before packing and moving again on the last day.

If I was you, I'd extend the stay in Prague (which is already longer than most) by one or better two days. That way you have one longer break where you can waste some time to just relax without caring about sights, packing or whatever. For me it'd be too hectic a schedule without such a time to relax.

Prague is a great place to hang out and I'd prefer sacrificing one other city to get the longer stay there.

Thanks for the last round of replys, if I could give you all a huge hug/kiss I would. Going to let what you said soak in and redo the schedule a bit. Keep the advice coming!

BTW, on a quick note. We are going to Turin because we have a good friend there, he has a huge house somewhere in Monaco and in Wetzlar (near Frankfurt - I just put Frankfurt because i'm assuming that's where the train would go) and he's single and wont be in town. He's letting us stay at his place(s) for free so we figured that we would make good use of it by using the place in Wetzlar/Frankfurt & Turin as hub, and go to different places around the area - that's the only reason we are staying longer in each of those places - but where around there is good enough to go on day trips? it's really not worth staying longer if we can't make day trips, right? so should we cut our stay in those places shorter and spend it elsewhere?

Fiance is not into Scandinavian things per say - he's an engineer specializing in alternative energy. I just finished med school. He has read a lot about the walkable communities and alternative energy things in Copenhagen and Stockholm - that's why he's insisting on going to those two particular places, could we make those stays also a bit shorter and still enjoy the cities? let me know

Also, thanks for the info on Cinque Terre, will cut that short.

Regarding hotels - we're only going to do hotels in certain places. We are both BIG fans of AirBNB and other similar sites, so we're going to use that for most places. I know some of you might be sneering at as but yeah, we're cheap like that and like it. Med school and grad school debt is no joke. We'll enjoy fancy hotels and resorts when we're older and have earned it, in the meantime couch surfing and sleeping on a strangers (who is not home!)- here we come!

Our age - he's 30 and I'm 27, so no Eurrail discount :/ and I'm actually mad at myself, because if I had purchased a Eurrail pass by Dec 30 we would have saved 20% !!!! (http://www.eurail.com/eurail-passes/deals-discounts/20-off-peak-discount) so mad at myself, but I found out about it too late! that could have saved us $310 -- do you all think we should bother w/ a 2 month Eurrail Global pass + 15 day Britrail pass? or just try to do this using point-by-point trains? Need to save the most money here because it's going to be the most expensive aspect. We could also do a 15 days within 2 months pass BUT that only limits us to 5 countries

Also, honestly do you think the fold up bikes are worth it to take?? they are SUPER light and once packed in their bag are considered carry on. BUT they will also need to be wheeled around once we're on the ground... still I could see them being super handy for our longer stays. What say you all?

Petalstogo, I am guessing no rail pass is going to turn out to be cheaper for you, but a lot of math is involved in figuring it out, so when you absolutely have your itinerary finalized come back and tell us what it is, and we can help you through the maze of European train systems. There are LOTS of bargains to be had, but you do need to commit to traveling from A to B on certain days at certain times. Meaning, you pay through the nose for total flexibility to change your plans.

Can't speak to the bike issue, sorry. If I never get on another bike in my life, that'll be fine with me.

I have no problem with Airbnb accommodations - I think it's a great service! We had a rather weird and funny experience with them last time we were in France (you can read about it in my Trip Report called Not A Trip Report by clicking on my name here if you so wish), but we are totally into traveling on the smallest budget possible these days (after years of traveling more upscale, but it's fine!). We did fine in Paris, for example, on about 25-30 euros a day for food and wine for the two of us and didn't feel deprived, and our AirBnb place was just wild and wacky enough to keep us laughing for four days.

StCirq - thanks for the info, and yes we are fine letting go of the flexibility. In fact, I have a little bit of type A personality - so I would PREFER to stick to a set itinerary. Will be finalizing things tonight and tomorrow and will update all of you. Going to go read about your trip! sounds like you had a blast, and laughs are always a plus.

Rental bicycles are available in every European town. Too much hassle to take your own bicycles. Remember: Travel light.
May 27 - June 4 Rome Skip Pompeii and take in Civita di Bagnoregio and Orvieto 70 minutes north of Rome. Then head for Florence.
June 4 - June 7 Florence (day trip to Siena via bus) Rent car and head for San Gimignano and Volterra.
June 7 - June 10 Cinque Terre Train thru Pisa to get to La Spezia.
June 11 - June 14 Venice Skip it and go on to Turin from C.T.
June 15 - June 18 Turin (day trips to Milano and Lugano or Lake Como)
June 19 - 21 Luzern
June 22 - June 24 Munich
June 25 - June 27 Salzburg Take in Cesky Krumlov if ahead of schedule.
June 28 - July 2 Prague
July 3 - July 6 Berlin
July 7 - July 9 Copenhagen
July 10 - July 13 Stockholm (World class city in Summer)
July 14 - July 18 Frankfurt/Wetzlar Skip it. Too expensive to get to by air, and too far out of the way.
I'll stop at this point.
July 19 - July 24 Paris
July 25 - July 26 Brussels
July 27 - July 28 Amsterdam
August 29 - August 4 London
August 5 - August 7 Essex
August 8 - August 15 Edinburgh

Lucca can be done on the same day as Pisa. Do Lucca in the morning when the shops are open (and ride bikes around the top of the wall), Pisa later. The Pisa-Lucca trip would be by train. But it's most efficient to take the bus from Florence to Siena. The bus, which leaves across the street from the main train station, drops you in the middle of Siena, whereas the train station is outside the walls.

<< June 7 - June 10 Cinque Terre (would we have to go back to Florence in order to get to Venice or can we just go from La Spezia?) >>

You can go from La Spezia but you'll probably have to change trains once or twice en route. Another reason to travel light.

In addition to the previous recommendations, there's Giverny, Monet's home and garden.

<< July 25 - July 26 Brussels
July 27 - July 28 Amsterdam >>

I'd skip Brussels and spend 2 nights in Amsterdam. More to see there and you'll be frustrated even with 2 days.

<<August 29 - August 4 London
August 5 - August 7 Essex
August 8 - August 15 Edinburgh (possible day drip nearby or places to stop on our way from Essex to Edinburgh ** give me recommendations)>>

Many possibilities here. Staying on the east side, there's York (lots to see) and Durham, the North Yorkshire moors, Hadrian's wall,.... It doesn't make sense to stay in Edinburgh and do day trips by car. Parking in central Edinburgh, where you will want to stay, is rare and expensive. If you drop the car, you can instead take bus day trips; both Rabbie's and Timberbush are recommended and offer a variety of trips in smaller groups. We did a day trip to St. Andrews, an interesting town even if you don't like golf.

Just noticed your dates in Edinburgh overlap with the Festival. I hope you already have a place to stay. It's crowded and expensive in Edinburgh in August, but the Festival is famous worldwide.

Reading this in one gulp, it seems like an awful lot of stops. But you do have a fair amount of time at many places. Hopefully you'll be able to slow down a bit and smell the roses.

alright, going to finalize things a bit more tonight, but in the meantime I crunched some numbers and I think we can get away with renting a car for the first part of our trip.

So what I am thinking is that we should rent a car on the day that we are leaving ROME and we can use that to travel to go to
Florence
Venice
Turin/Milan
Lucerne
Munich
Salzbur
Vienna
Prague
Wetzlar/Frankfurt - we have to go here to visit some family nearby

we will return the car the day we arrive in Frankfurt, stay in the area for a few days and from that point on take the train, etc.

I already have a quote for the car ($1,250)
and I have estimated the miles and even added 200 miles in case of trips out of the way, the car gets about 31mpg but I estimated it at around 25mpg - took that and accounted for $9.00 per gallon of gas and the total for that comes out $825. the only thing that I have not taken into account is toll roads, etc. because I have no idea how much they are.

I think it might be worth it to have the car for that first leg because the places we are going the cities are only about 1.5 - 5 hours apart from each other and having the car for that leg of the trip will allow us to go to stop and go as we please... it's also a pretty scenic drive, so that will really enhance the whole experience.

It is basically similar to the one through Kemwel mentioned above with Peugeot. We use this program every year-it is only really cost effective if you keep the car a month though and it is cheaper per day the longer you keep the car and cheaper if you can pick up and drop in France. The site can give you a quote "instantly" on the website so you can compare with the train and car combo you are thinking about-no need to contact anyone. And you get on your preference of car-and it will be a brand new car that includes all insurance and you can choose the model and make and can guarantee that you get a diesel car which will save on fuel coasts.

It might be worth a look-you might even consider bringing your bikes if you keep a car the entire time. My husband and I live part time in France and frankly we have mostly found that with 2 people, even with gas and tolls many times a car is about the same price as taking trains. It also gives you so much more freedom.

So for instance you could fly into Nice and pick up the car avoiding the out of France $100 pick up fee, then drive to Italy and start part one of your trip then just continue on to part 2 of your trip and drop the car in Paris and take the Eurostar to London from there.

Have fun! My husband and I also got married on the last Saturday of May but 39 years ago. We flew to Europe for our honeymoon but used my husband's grandmother's deux chevaux that looked like this for our honeymoon:

<<we should rent a car on the day that we are leaving ROME and we can use that to travel to go to
Florence
Venice
Turin/Milan...>>

You do not want to have a car in Florence or Turin or Milan (ZTL problems!), and you can't have one in Venice, so I don't think that's a good plan unless you want to be parking outside those cities and taking public transportation in. Seems like a waste of money.

This is all looking great, Petalstogo. I did 10 weeks in Europe last year and have one word of advice: give yourself some vacations from your vacation. You'll want and need the occasional "day off" where you sleep in, watch TV/read, and do pretty much nothing. I found I needed one about every 2.5 weeks.

I didn't do EuroRail Pass, instead did a mix of buses/trains/rental cars. I didn't do the math on it though, so no idea if I would have saved money doing the rail pass and for the most part I bought them right there at the station before getting on whatever I was getting on.

There's no such thing as a EuroRail Pass. It's Eurail, and it's a MARKETING COMPANY that exists to sell overpriced European train tickets to unsuspecting Americans (in particular). So stay away from it.

We used to insert a short (2 or 3 day) vacation from the vacation in the middle of our itinerary (usually 3 or 4 weeks). But sometimes we got a bit bored during our mini-vacation. So we switched to adding an extra day here and there, to places where we thought we'd like more time. This has worked out well. We mostly don't use the whole day to relax, we just take the whole visit a little more slowly.

My husband and I did the same thing to start our honeymoon, but right at the end of our Ph.D. program. My main piece of advice--you will be exhausted (especially the bride) after the wedding; give yourself some time (preferably some time with just the two of you) to relax, recover, sleep. We were a bit too ambitious, and by the end of the trip I had to spend a whole day in bed, in Florence.

Other advice: mention to everyone you see that your are on your "honeymoon," "luna di miele," "lune de miel," etc... It's unbelievable the extra liqueur, service, and good feeling that you get.

So, in our case, in two months, FYI, we spent about a week in London and an week in Kent (with friends of the family), then a week in Paris (at a friend's apartment) and a week in Burgundy, centered in Dijon, then a week in Rome and a week in Florence. That was enough for us--although we did a number of side trips in the Kent and Burgundy areas.

My personal opinion: Cinque Terre is beautiful but has way too much tourists, it's become a bit artificial really. If I were you, I'd ask the friends in Turin for an alternative in Italy that is less crowded/touristy.

>Wetzlar (near Frankfurt - I just put Frankfurt because i'm assuming that's where the train >would go) and he's single and wont be in town. He's letting us stay at his place(s) for free so >we figured that we would make good use of it by using the place in Wetzlar/Frankfurt & Turin >as hub,

Near Wetzlar you should try to see Limburg, Marburg and Alsfeld - all are pretty and close by. If you go further afield, Göttingen and Duderstadt to the north are nice too. Kassel is a cultural centre but isn't especially pretty (destroyed and rebuilt after the war).

Okay I'm back!! a few things have changed. Due to my fiances school & job schedule we have to do this. We have 3 week to see Italy & France and after that we will be "stuck" in London for 6 weeks - but HE wont be able to take any day trips.... so all of this changes stuff. That means that for the 3 weeks of Italy and France I want to squeeze a few things in there. I am going to take Cinque Terre off the list for Italy because it's out of the day and will eat up a whole day. At this point I am thinking of starting off with 4-5 days in Rome, Pompeii, Florence (2 days), Venice 2 days and from there to France... Eurail has a deal right now that's only good for 1 more day... should I buy the 15 day pass? will I be able to use the Eurail pass to get from Rome to Florence and to Venice? Will I be able to go throughout the country or will I be forced to purchase other tickets. Anyway, I am kind of bummed out about having to cut our trip short.... but he has to do for his fellowship and it's a great opportunity, so I am doing my best to be supportive.

Anyway, any advice or feedback would still be greatly appreciated. What places are a must in Italy? HELP!

There are plenty of websites where you can read about Eurail passes and what they cover, they even have their own website. Generally, Eurail passes only make sense for people who are traveling by train a lot on long-distance trips. I have never seen them make sense for people who want to use them for day trips or short trips. However, if you get one free as a gift and you won't get the same gift if you do local tickets, it might make sense. You would buy the 2 country pass for France and Italy. They are still pretty expensive, around $300 for 5-6 days of travel. But in euro, that's around 40 euro a day so isn't actually terrible if it is convenient to use. I'm thinking mainly Italy as in France, seats are limited for passholders. That is the regional pass for France-Italy.

I don't see any special sale on the Eurail website for only one day, they have a get one day free thing but that ends 4/30, not 3/30. I think iot is a better deal if you are under age 26, of course.

Wow, congrats in advance from an old guy married 60 years! What a treat just to travel, never mind where. And certainly wonderful to have family places for lodging where possible. There are so many places to see but of course you will have a lifetime. Our overseas travel has been spread out during a lifetime that included in addition raising a family, camping, sightseeing in the U. S.

I like the advice of relaxing after the wedding. As for change of plans you will enjoy time in Italy I'm sure. But I might add do agree on what you want to see and do, i.e. sightseeing, historical sites, great art, hiking. Just don't wear yourselves out which leads to arguments instead of love making.

Now then, please don't fret about London. Regarding the longer stay this is a great place for short trips on whatever days you can carve out. Just being in London area for starters.